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Claiming Social Security After a Divorce

Even though the marriage is over, you may be entitled to claim benefits based on the earnings record of your ex-spouse.

By Susan B. Garland, Editor, Kiplinger's Retirement Report

May 1, 2010
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EDITOR'S NOTE: This article was originally published in the March 2010 issue of Kiplinger's Retirement Report. To subscribe, click here.

If you're divorced or soon to be, would you like to hear some happy news? If you were the lower earner, you're probably entitled to Social Security benefits on your former spouse's earnings record. And it won't cost your ex a penny.

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To be eligible for a spousal benefit on an ex-spouse's record, you must have been married for at least ten years and be at least 62. If you remarry, you will lose the benefits of your former spouse, at least until that second marriage ends in divorce or death.

If that happens, you may be able to select the best benefits among your former spouses. "If you were married two or three times, you can choose the spouse that has the highest benefit," says Sara Stolberg, a Lincolnshire, Ill., certified financial planner who specializes in divorce planning.

For the most part, the Social Security rules for divorced couples are the same as those for married couples. For instance, if you collect a spousal benefit when you are at full retirement age, it's generally 50% of your ex-spouse's benefit. The benefit will be reduced by a certain percentage for each month you collect before you reach full retirement age. "The longer you can wait, the more you will get," says Barbara Shapiro, president of HMS Financial Group, in Dedham, Mass., and a specialist in divorce issues.

One difference: Even if your ex-spouse has not applied for benefits, you may be allowed to collect spousal benefits. To qualify, your former spouse must be eligible for benefits, which means he or she must be at least 62, and you must have been divorced for at least two years.

Because divorced women tend to be the lower earners, they usually have the most to gain from these rules. But there are times when high-earning ex-husbands can take advantage of these benefits, too.

Next year, when he turns his full retirement age of 66, Steven Wertime says he intends to apply for a 50% spousal benefit on his ex-wife's earnings record. The couple was divorced in 1988 after 20 years of marriage. When he turns 70, Wertime, who is single, will apply for his own benefit, which, because of four years of delayed retirement credits, will be 32% higher than his benefit at his full retirement age.

"Why not allow my own benefit to accumulate?" says Wertime, a certified financial planner with his own firm in Falls Church, Va. "I'm assuming I will have a long life expectancy." (If you're the higher earner, you must be full retirement age to be able to choose between a spousal benefit and your own benefit.)

Claim a Survivor Benefit When Your Ex Dies

If your ex-spouse dies, you could get a survivor benefit if your marriage lasted ten years or more. You can start receiving a survivor benefit as young as age 60, or age 50 if you are disabled.

If you are full retirement age when you collect, the survivor benefit will be 100% of the deceased ex-spouse's benefit. The benefit will be reduced if you claim it earlier. If you are already receiving a benefit based on your own earnings record, you will continue to receive your benefit plus a check for the difference between your benefit and the survivor benefit. And if you were collecting a spousal benefit on your ex-spouse's record, you can switch to a survivor benefit if the ex dies. If you remarry after age 60, you can still receive the survivor benefit.

Timing can be crucial. Shapiro had a client who was getting divorced just short of her tenth anniversary. She spoke with the lawyer of her client's husband and they pushed back the date of the final divorce decree.

You may also be eligible for free Medicare Part A benefits based on your ex-husband or ex-wife's earnings record, which could be valuable if you haven't accumulated enough Social Security credits to be eligible for Medicare on your own.

You will need to provide a certified copy of your divorce decree to claim benefits. To expedite your application, you should have your ex-spouse's Social Security number, too. Social Security will not notify your ex. Your claim will not affect your ex's benefits at all, nor the benefits of a new spouse of your ex.

For more authoritative guidance on retirement investing, slashing taxes and getting the best health care, click here for a FREE sample issue of Kiplinger’s Retirement Report.



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Reader Comments (6)

Posted by: al doty at 08/07/2010 05:17:19 PM

you had a guy give back $142,000. where did he get the money to give back? he gets an extra $1,200 for doing so it will be over 12 years befor he will benifit not including interest he could make on the $ 142,000 . If he hunted down company's that pay high dividends he could get 8 or 9% on that money and he would never live long enough to break even by collecting that extra $1,200 a month.

Posted by: deborah l white at 08/07/2010 08:31:40 PM

I wonder if a spouse has walked out and he is claimming ssi and i go for a divorce because he walked on the marriage,can he claim on mine . Because we have only been marriage for only 2 yrs and going on 3yrs can he do that

Posted by: fran r. at 08/07/2010 11:14:03 PM

why is the fed goverment the biggest discriminator in this country? The woman cant remarry even the ex soc. sec has nothing to do with the new husbands who is retired I was married for thirty six years ...Got divorced and had to wait 9 years before i got the first check. Only after I had to get divorced from my husband. but man dont have to wait or divorced their new wife there is a double standard in this country against woman and it is wrong...one soc sec has nothing to do with another other soc sec...there are three differend people

Posted by: lani at 08/09/2010 03:25:35 PM

my ex and i were together for a total of 15 years. we married in our 9th year and were married for only 6 years. so according to the above article i am not qualified. but what about common law. could that possibly count?

Posted by: Susan at 08/26/2010 12:43:35 PM

I recieved benefits from my ex spouce while I was married to my second spouce. I will be required to pay this back to S.S. I understand this but S.S. is also asking me to pay back the amount which I recieved from spouce no 1 after the death of spouce no 2 even though the benefit as a widow of no 2 is larger than the benefit which I recieved from no 1. What can I do?

Posted by: AJGR at 09/05/2010 06:40:18 AM

I was married for 32 years got 7yrs alimony reducing every year and moved back to the family home my late mother left me in Ireland.I never claimed for Medicare because I live here and I got a supposed half of my exes IRA which I live on as when I worked for him they didn't take out on my measly pay is there any way I can get more on his IRA or his SS as he is 71 and still working




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